Protected Functions

Detailed Description

The QAxBase class is an abstract class that provides an API to initialize and access a COM object.

QAxBase is an abstract class that cannot be used directly, and is instantiated through the subclasses QAxObject and QAxWidget. This class provides the API to access the COM object directly through its IUnknown implementation. If the COM object implements the IDispatch interface, the properties and methods of that object become available as Qt properties and slots.

connect(buttonBack, SIGNAL(clicked()), webBrowser, SLOT(GoBack()));

Properties exposed by the object's IDispatch implementation can be read and written through the property system provided by the Qt Object Model (both subclasses are QObjects, so you can use QObject::setProperty() and QObject::property()). Properties with multiple parameters are not supported.

Supported COM datatypes are listed in the first column of following table. The second column is the Qt type that can be used with the QObject property functions. The third column is the Qt type that is used in the prototype of generated signals and slots for in-parameters, and the last column is the Qt type that is used in the prototype of signals and slots for out-parameters.

Note that the QList the object should fill has to be provided as an element in the parameter list of QVariants.

If you need to access properties or pass parameters of unsupported datatypes you must access the COM object directly through its IDispatch implementation or other interfaces. Those interfaces can be retrieved through queryInterface().

To get the definition of the COM interfaces you will have to use the header files provided with the component you want to use. Some compilers can also import type libraries using the #import compiler directive. See the component documentation to find out which type libraries you have to import, and how to use them.

If you need to react to events that pass parameters of unsupported datatypes you can use the generic signal that delivers the event data as provided by the COM event.

[virtual] QAxBase::~QAxBase()

Returns a QVariant that wraps the COM object. The variant can then be used as a parameter in e.g. dynamicCall().

[virtual] void QAxBase::clear()

Disconnects and destroys the COM object.

If you reimplement this function you must also reimplement the destructor to call clear(), and call this implementation at the end of your clear() function.

void QAxBase::disableClassInfo()

Disables the class info generation for this ActiveX container. If you don't require any class information about the ActiveX control use this function to speed up the meta object generation.

Note that this function must be called immediately after construction of the object

void QAxBase::disableEventSink()

Disables the event sink implementation for this ActiveX container. If you don't intend to listen to the ActiveX control's events use this function to speed up the meta object generation.

Some ActiveX controls might be unstable when connected to an event sink. To get OLE events you must use standard COM methods to register your own event sink. Use queryInterface() to get access to the raw COM object.

Note that this function should be called immediately after construction of the object.

void QAxBase::disableMetaObject()

Disables the meta object generation for this ActiveX container. This also disables the event sink and class info generation. If you don't intend to use the Qt meta object implementation call this function to speed up instantiation of the control. You will still be able to call the object through dynamicCall(), but signals, slots and properties will not be available with QObject APIs.

Some ActiveX controls might be unstable when used with OLE automation. Use standard COM methods to use those controls through the COM interfaces provided by queryInterface().

Note that this function must be called immediately after construction of the object.

Calls the COM object's method function, passing the parameters var1, var1, var2, var3, var4, var5, var6, var7 and var8, and returns the value returned by the method, or an invalid QVariant if the method does not return a value or when the function call failed.

If function is a method of the object the string must be provided as the full prototype, for example as it would be written in a QObject::connect() call.

dynamicCall() can also be used to call objects with a disabled metaobject wrapper, which can improve performance significantely, esp. when calling many different objects of different types during an automation process. ActiveQt will then however not validate parameters.

It is only possible to call functions through dynamicCall() that have parameters or return values of datatypes supported by QVariant. See the QAxBase class documentation for a list of supported and unsupported datatypes. If you want to call functions that have unsupported datatypes in the parameter list, use queryInterface() to retrieve the appropriate COM interface, and use the function directly.

Calls the COM object's method function, passing the parameters in vars, and returns the value returned by the method. If the method does not return a value or when the function call failed this function returns an invalid QVariant object.

The QVariant objects in vars are updated when the method has out-parameters.

This signal is emitted when the COM object throws an exception while called using the OLE automation interface IDispatch. code, source, desc and help provide information about the exception as provided by the COM server and can be used to provide useful feedback to the end user. help includes the help file, and the help context ID in brackets, e.g. "filename [id]".

Returns a rich text string with documentation for the wrapped COM object. Dump the string to an HTML-file, or use it in e.g. a QTextBrowser widget.

[virtual protected] bool QAxBase::initialize(IUnknown ** ptr)

This virtual function is called by setControl() and creates the requested COM object. ptr is set to the object's IUnknown implementation. The function returns true if the object initialization succeeded; otherwise the function returns false.

See the control property documentation for details about supported patterns.

The interface returned in ptr must be referenced exactly once when this function returns. The interface provided by e.g. CoCreateInstance is already referenced, and there is no need to reference it again.

[protected] bool QAxBase::initializeActive(IUnknown ** ptr)

Connects to an active instance running on the current machine, and returns the IUnknown interface to the running object in ptr. This function returns true if successful, otherwise returns false.

This function is called by initialize() if the control string contains the substring "}&".

bool QAxBase::isNull() const

Returns a name:value map of all the properties exposed by the COM object.

This is more efficient than getting multiple properties individually if the COM object supports property bags.

Warning: It is not guaranteed that the property bag implementation of the COM object returns all properties, or that the properties returned are the same as those available through the IDispatch interface.

If name is provided by a method the string must include the full function prototype.

If name is a property the string must be the name of the property, and var1, ... var8 are ignored.

The returned QAxObject is a child of this object (which is either of type QAxObject or QAxWidget), and is deleted when this object is deleted. It is however safe to delete the returned object yourself, and you should do so when you iterate over lists of subobjects.

COM enabled applications usually have an object model publishing certain elements of the application as dispatch interfaces. Use this method to navigate the hierarchy of the object model, e.g.

Sets the properties of the COM object to the corresponding values in bag.

Warning: You should only set property bags that have been returned by the propertyBag function, as it cannot be guaranteed that the property bag implementation of the COM object supports the same properties that are available through the IDispatch interface.

This generic signal gets emitted when the COM object issues the event name. argc is the number of parameters provided by the event (DISPPARAMS.cArgs), and argv is the pointer to the parameter values (DISPPARAMS.rgvarg). Note that the order of parameter values is turned around, ie. the last element of the array is the first parameter in the function.